Falconio v. Larsen

37 L.R.A. 254, 48 P. 703, 31 Or. 137, 1897 Ore. LEXIS 22
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 1, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 37 L.R.A. 254 (Falconio v. Larsen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Falconio v. Larsen, 37 L.R.A. 254, 48 P. 703, 31 Or. 137, 1897 Ore. LEXIS 22 (Or. 1897).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wolverton,

after stating the facts, •delivered the opinion of the court.

The principal question suggested by the controversy is touching the assignability of claims of laborers, the preferment of which the enactment is designed to promote. No contention is made but that the claimants might each for himself have prosecuted an action in his own name of the nature here adopted to establish his individual claim; but it is insisted that the preference which the law raises is a privilege strictly personal to the claimant, and one [142]*142which he alone can exercise; that the mode or process by means of which he may avail himself of the privilege is specifically pointed out by statute, and, being a procedure unknown to the common law, it should be strictly followed in the establishment of the preferential right, and, until fully perfected, it is not in any event assignable. The statute, in so far as it concerns the case at bar, is, in effect, that hereafter, whenever any assignment for the benefit of creditors shall be made, the debts owing to laborers or employees, which have accrued by reason of their labor or employment, to an amount not exceeding $100 to each employee for work and labor performed within ninety days next preceding the assignment, shall be considered and treated as preferred debts, and such laborers and employees shall be preferred creditors, and shall first be paid in full; but, if there be not sufficient to pay them in full, then the same shall be paid to them pro rata after paying costs. Any such laborer or employee desiring to enforce his claim for wages under sections 1, 2, and 3 of this act, shall present a statement under oath, showing the amount due after allowing all just credits and set-offs, the kind of work for which said wages are due, and when performed, to the assignee, within thirty days after the property shall have been placed in the hands of such assignee. (The form of the statement is given, and runs in the first person.) Thereupon he shall serve upon the debtor, or upon his assignee where personal service cannot be had, a copy of such claim, and thereafter it shall be the duty of the assignee to report the amount of such claim or claims to the court having [143]*143jurisdiction, together with a statement of all costs occasioned by the assignment; and such court shall order said claims to be paid after payment of costs and expenses of the assignment, out of the proceeds of sales of the property assigned; provided, that any person interested may contest such claim or claims, or any part thereof, by filing in said court exceptions thereto, supported by affidavit; and thereupon the claimant shall be required to establish his or her claim by judgment in such court before any part thereof shall be paid. When any claim is excepted -to, the person desiring to establish the same shall file in said court his verified complaint as in an action at law, and serve the same upon the person excepting and the principal debtor, and thereafter the cause shall proceed to final judgment between said parties as an action at law. Section 2 provides for the ádjustment of costs and attorney’s fees, and section 3 that the assignee shall not be discharged until every claimant presenting his or her claim under the provisions of the act shall have been paid in full, or <pro rata, or shall have consented to the discharge.

1. The act creates a new right, and prescribes a remedy for its enforcement. In so far as it imposes a burden upon specific property, it should be strictly construed; but, where the right is clearly given, the interpretation should be such as will promote, rather than impede or destroy, the remedy, so as to meet, if reasonably within the terms of the statute, the exigencies which impelled the enactment. In other words, a remedy is the concomitant of a right; and, where a new right is established, its usefulness depends upon [144]*144the means of its enforcement, so that, when the legislature attempts to prescribe a remedy, it will be presumed that it intended to adopt such a one as will effectuate the purpose, and the interpretation of the remedial enactment will be such as to promote the intendment as fully as the language employed will admit. The undoubted purpose of the act was to constitute the laborer or employee a preferred creditor, as it pertains to the property of his employer seized upon by any process, or passing to a receiver or assignee. Under all the conditions enumerated, the property is placed in custodia legis, and thereafter it is administered in pursuance of law; and the act in question imposes an additional burden upon it, and subjects it first, after the payment of certain costs, to the payment of the labor claims designated. The enactment does not create a lien, but invests the laborer or employee with the rights and privileges incident to the relation of preferred creditor, and directs the order of his payment out of a fund which is already in the custody of the law for the purpose of administration, in subordination to its rules and regulations. The act declares that hereafter, when the property of any person shall be seized, etc., such laborers or employees “shall be preferred creditors, and shall first be paid:” Laws, 1891, p. 81, § 1. Thus, the legislature has inseparably coupled the preference with the event which inures instanter, upon the happening thereof, to the benefit of the designated classes. It is a substantive right, created by edict, and not the right to acquire it by the doing of certain things or the observance of any conditions. The property is charged, ipso facto the hap[145]*145pening of the seizure or the assignment, with the prior payment of the debts of laborers or employees which have accrued under the conditions contemplated.

With the right or preference thus clearly established, it remains to examine the manner of its enforcement, and to determine to what extent the remedy must be pursued as a personal privilege. Manifestly, the statute comprehends only such debts as are owing to the laborers or employees at the date of the seizure or assignment, and these debts are denominated “claims for wages.” Now, it is provided that any such person desiring to enforce such a claim shall, in case of an assignment, present a statement, made out and verified in the form and manner prescribed, to the assignee, within thirty days after the property has been placed in his hands, and serve a copy upon the debtor. Such is the method by which a claimant may avail himself of his preference. Thus far it would seem that the privilege is personal to the laborer or employee, as he may adopt the remedy if he desires, within the statutory period, or he may waive it as a debtor may waive the exemptions from seizure upon execution, by not claiming them in due season from the officer having the property in charge. When a claim is thus presented, a duty is devolved upon the assignee to report it to the court, and upon the court to direct its payment out of the proceeds of the sale of the property, first after the payment of the costs and expenses of the assignment. But it is further provided that any person interested may contest such a claim by filing exceptions thereto, and thereafter it is made incumbent upon the claimant to establish the [146]*146same by filing a verified complaint, as in an action at law, and that thereafter the cause shall proceed to judgment between the parties.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 L.R.A. 254, 48 P. 703, 31 Or. 137, 1897 Ore. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/falconio-v-larsen-or-1897.